I remember six years ago when the district officials for my school system first decided all classroom teachers must post state standards and objectives for every lesson taught. I dutifully copied all 200+ standards onto individual chart strips, laminated them (oh, what a waste!), and kept them organized numerically in a long cardboard box. I thought I’d made my work easy–each day, I’d just switch out the old chart strips for the new ones.
Then administration decided that STUDENTS must understand the daily objectives. The language must also be posted in kid-friendly terms, and any adult should be able to walk in to the classroom and ask a seven-year-old kid what the purpose of the activity was, and the student should be able to answer.
A handful of my colleagues were outraged. And all of us were baffled. Getting little kids to articulate (on demand, to total strangers visiting the classroom) what they were learning and WHY in every lesson seemed like an insurmountable task. And maybe an unnecessary one. But the new requirement caused us to ask ourselves some hard questions on a daily basis:
- Do students really understand whythey’re learning this skill or concept?
- Can they make a clear connection between the activity and the outcome I’ve told them to aim for?
- Have I done my best to make this task and its objective meaningful and relevant to students’ lives?
I realized I wanted my students to know what they were learning and its purpose for their own sake, not for accountability to district officials. I began posting my objectives in kid-friendly language and incorporating them into our morning meeting discussions. I noticed students actually started reading and talking about the objectives on their own (“Hey, look, we’re going to learn the multiply by 6 today! Ooh, no more narrative essays, this week we’re doing expository!”) I made an increased effort to help them explore the purpose and meaning of their work, more than I ever had before. But I never felt like I developed my lesson purpose as well as I could have with my students. Like so many other aspects of my practice, I knew there was more I could be doing, but wasn’t sure what or how.
Enter The Purposeful Classroom: How to Structure Lessons with Learning Goals in Mind, a new book by Douglas Fisher and Nancy Frey. Those names probably ring a bell for you: they’ve written tons of other books and I’ve previously professed my obsession with Reading for Information in Elementary School. This time around, the dynamic duo is tackling the issue of learning objectives.
Right at the beginning of the book, Fisher and Frey differentiate between a lesson objective (which is in the mind of the teacher) and the lesson purpose, which is the act of carefully communicating the objective to students. They address the SMART criteria for objectives and even touch on how inquiry-based lessons fit in. I love that they talk about how backwards planning (a la my beloved Understanding by Design) makes establishing purpose easier, and even how purpose works with theme-based instruction. Fisher and Frey explain that students who reflect on their purpose for learning understand and retain material better, and approach their work with more creativity and critical thinking skills.
This is a fantastic book for any teacher who is serious about creating objectives and purpose for lessons. The Purposeful Classroom is no easy beach read due to the subject matter, but it’s written in a straight-forward, relevant way that addresses the major trends right now in education and ties them all back to creating meaning and purpose for students. Fisher and Frey explain in very simple terms how to write objectives that include both content and language components, and how those objectives fit with pacing guides.They even use the buzz-word du jour “unpacking the standards” in a surprisingly meaningful way.
I especially like the chapters on ensuring that a lesson’s purpose is relevant and inviting students to own the purpose. They discuss intrinsic vs. extrisic motivation as well as fixed versus growth mindsets, teaching kids how to set their own goals, and using “I Can” statements. The book concludes with a discussion of assessment: identifying outcomes related to the purpose and knowing when a learning target has been met (which is not as easy as it seems; sometimes we think the class understands a concept when most kids have actually just muddled through it.)
ASCD has generously provide me with a review copy of this book as well as an additional copy for a give-away. For a chance to win this book, leave a comment on this post before midnight on Sunday, February 19th. Tell us what YOU find to be the most challenging aspect of purposeful lesson planning. I’ll choose a comment randomly and announce a winner right here in this space on Monday the 2oth. Good luck–this is a book that is definitely worth digging into!
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UPDATE 2/10/12: CONTEST CLOSED. The winner is Rebecca, number 110! Rebecca, send an email to angelawatson [at] live [dot] com and let me know what your mailing address is. Thank you to everyone who participated and shared ideas about lesson planning challenge! You’ve raised some really important points, and I’ll be addressing some of these concerns in an upcoming post.
Angela Watson
Founder and Writer
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The hardest part for me is definitely making the learning purposeful, but also ensuring they are ready for state assessments. Purposeful learning does not com in multiple choice questions, but we also have to teach that skill.
I struggle with making my K-6th students (I’m a Japanese teacher) embrace the relevance of learning the basics of the language. It’s easiest when it’s something like introducing yourself and stating your age, because that kind of conversation comes up all the time when you make new friends in a foreign country. I like to have students model the day’s dialog by pretending they are college exchange students and having such-and-such conversation in a given situation. They love pretending they are carrying around a backpack as a college student. Anyway, I have a hard time being that relevant in all my lessons (especially teaching colors, fruits, etc), but I WANT to make them “get into” all of the lessons and “feel” their relevance.
The hardest part for me is that I am a new teacher and so I am trying to juggle all the requirements and have meaningful learning for my students. I want to know how to be more purposeful and have enjoyable lessons for my students.
Biggest challenge is time! More and more responsiblities just keep piling up. It is hard to keep it all undercontrol. Two grade levels, elementary school being run like a middle school because we are short teachers, million dollar shortages not going anywhere, children who district hop, turn over of administrators….I would love to just teach. I do love to teach! Wish it was my only job…wait it is the only one i get paid for. 🙂
I think the most challenging part of making lessons purposeful is helping children see the relevance of a lesson they may not understand. This wasn’t as difficult when I was teaching older students. Trying to help my 2nd graders understand why they need to know this (whatever “this” is at that moment) for the long-term is difficult. I teach in a high poverty area and many of the kids can barely see the end of the day let alone the end of a unit or school year. This presents its own challenges when trying to ensure children understand why something will be important for them to know LATER rather than immediately.